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Somnium

Somnium premiered on July 16th 2024 as part of Galway International Arts Festival.

Somnium Production Information

Overview

A woman at night. A vocal ritual. An invocation. And then to rest. Where does our mind go when we cannot sleep? Based on the myth of Philomela, Somnium merges music, image and body to explore the voice and the voiceless, as Dawn approaches and the bird sings.

With new music from Julianna Bloodgood [Song of the Goat], and co-created by James Riordan in collaboration with theatre maker Philippa Hambly [1927] and visual artist Jane Cassidy, the piece had a sold out run at Galway International Arts Festival 2024.

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Production Team

Directed by James Riordan
Text by Philippa Hambly and James Riordan
Lyrics and Music by Julianna Bloodgood
Lighting Designer Sarah Jane Shiels
Video/AV Design Jane Cassidy
Costume Design Cliodhna Hallissey
Set Design and Construction Andrew Clancy
Hair Siobhan Patterson
Producer Jill Murray
Production Manager Lisa Mahony
Stage Manager Sorcha De Faoite
Sound Engineer Aidah Samah
Chief LX Órla Kelly Smith and Marie Hegarty
Crew Eoin Kelly Smith and Mark Banger Byrne
Developed with Victoria McCormack, Jacinta Sheeran and Helen Gregg

SOMNIUM TRAILER

Somnium Reviews

Deirdre Falvey

The Irish Times

5 star review
Bru Theatre Somnium Irish Times Review

Dark story of sexual violence becomes a stunning dream show.

Galway International Arts Festival 2024: Brú Theatre’s production is absorbing, beautiful and disturbing

What is Somnium? That woozy gap between wake and sleep is the setting for Brú Theatre’s absorbing, beautiful, disturbing, totally enveloping new show, which premiered at Galway International Arts Festival. Like the state of somnium – or dreaming – itself, this show exists in borderlands, of awake sleep, but also in how it’s created, skirting theatre, light and projections, music, dance and movement, voice spoken and sung, to create a stunning, ritualistic, immersive, multisensory experience..

Thu Jul 18 2024

READ THE FULL REVIEW

Helen Meany

The Guardian

The Guardian Somnium Review
The Guradian Review

Philomela’s violent tale told with ethereal artistry.

Director James Riordan blends ancient ritual and modern technology, while the music of Julianna Bloodgood is compelling.

Ethereal sound and imagery transform an ancient story of rape and mutilation in Brú Theatre’s new production. Combining ancient ritual and modern technology, director James Riordan, two performers and the designers create an enveloping experience, with precisely calibrated audiovisual effects.
The story of Philomela (Philippa Hambly) who was raped by her sister Procne’s husband, King Tereus, is presented in snatches, drawing on different versions. Based on the Greek myth of Philomela and Procne, it is told in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, and also pops up in TS Eliot’s The Waste Land. It helps to know that Philomela is later transformed into a nightingale, since the bird is a recurring image here.
Layers of gauze curtains become screens for artist Jane Cassidy’s projected images of leaves, clouds and water, while lights swirl and voices emerge from the gloaming. Composed, performed and sung by Julianna Bloodgood, the score is a rich blend of harmonium, percussion, live and recorded vocals, eclectically mixing languages and world musical traditions. When Tereus cuts out Philomela’s tongue to prevent her from revealing what he has done, Bloodgood’s song becomes a low, thrumming lament: a guttural cry that also has controlled resonance. Bloodgood is such a compelling presence and superb singer that at times she eclipses the staged sequences.
Delicately lit by Sarah Jane Shiels, projections of swirling fog and surf fill the stage and auditorium, as Philomela, submitting to waves of grief, dives beneath, to emerge in a bird mask. It is exquisite, yet seems too delicate a treatment of this violent myth. Strangely, it omits Philomela’s resistance: refusing to be silenced, she embroidered a tapestry for Procne depicting the rape, and the sisters went on to exact horrifically gory revenge on Tereus, an act that inspired Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus. For all the artistry of this production, its dreamy solemnity is lacking some grit.

Sun 21 Jul 2024 

Chris O'Rourke

The Arts Review

Somnium Review
The Arts Review Logo

A dichotomy is established even before the show begins, foreshadowing the tension between opposing worlds. The ancient dark of an ageless stage offset by calming music suggestive of a modern spa. The conflict resolved momentarily as artist Julianna Bloodgood keens in the darkness.

Haunting that liminal space suggested by the show’s title Somnium. The world between waking and sleep. As Bloodgood sits by her instruments, unfurling shadows behind sheets of gauze reveal a woman sat onstage. The vocal ritual given physical and narrative accompaniment by Philippa Hambly, with both performances soon enriched by Jane Cassidy’s stunning parade of impressive visuals. Brú Theatre’s fifty-five minute ritual aspiring towards transformation and occasionally getting there. Even as its retelling of a tale as old as time can feel twice as long at times. Its story aspiring to myth reduced to a fairytale.

The tale in question being the Greek legend of sisters Philomela and Procne. About how Procne’s husband, Tereus, rapes Philomela then cuts out her tongue to prevent her telling. About Philomela’s subsequent revenge by way of a nightingale and The Furies. Less reimagined so much as repackaged as strands of mist from the Celtic twilight. Its power diminished, its savagery sanitised by the civilised manner of its telling. Somnium unsure if it’s a concert with theatrical accompaniment or a theatrical performance with musical accompaniment. Competing forms of music, body and visual design striving towards interdisciplinary coherence yet rarely fusing into that transcendent other. The result, too often, suggestive of stylised, Riverdance broodiness with none of the joy.

Myth and mysticism more John Boorman’s Excalibur than Black Elk Speaks. Bloodgood’s hybrid of languages and sounds a spiritual Esperanto. Its text less the mythic poetry of a Joy Harjo so much as knock off Romanticism with cliched pastorals. Songs and scenes alternating as trippy visuals become more and more ambitious. Layered flames giving way to encompassing forests and breathtaking snowstorms as the story unfolds. From an ever shifting crowd to a nightingale in a sea of clouds that encompasses the entire room. Even as true depth is often achieved when visual flamboyance is reduced to the soft, orange glow of twilight gloom, or the haunting blue of moonlit shadow. All the while Bloodgood’s keening strives for moments of release. The final, stunning image, perfectly scored, achieving that sought after merging of sound, body and imagery. The end of a stumbling journey finally reached, the view making it one well worth the taking.

Despite talk of interdisciplinary collaboration, Somnium shows a clear, hierarchal order. A pyramid of power with Bloodgood firmly at its apex. Director and co-creator, James Riordan, theatre maker Hambly, and visual artist Cassidy acolytes in service to Bloodgood’s high priestess. Who, like all priests and priestesses, blocks access to the temple even as they reveal it. The audience obedient spectators rather than engaged participants hypnotised by the ritual’s sounds, shadows and lights. Attentive to Bloodgood’s musical finger pointing at the moon on a moonless night. Which is not always a bad thing by any measure. Bloodgood’s voice can weave such spells its balm for the soul.

Yet in borrowing from all traditions, Somnium belongs to none, even as it strives to root itself in the mythic past via pick and mix language and mysticism. Gregorian Latin replaced by a pagan chant, yet still only accessible to the initiated. The Catholic priest now a pagan priestess steeped in stillness. Singing the same song with different lyrics. Achieving roughly the same result. Even so, Bloodgood can wield such genuine power it’s impressive to behold on occassion.

As artistic experiments go, Somnium is often hugely successful. Even though it preaches to the converted, there’s more soul in this single production than many other companies can muster in a year. Brú Theatre reaffirming their reputation as one of the bravest, innovative, risk taking companies in the country. If Somnium can feel like the opening ceremony for the Olympics at times, there are moments it captures a million lifetimes, offering brief, fleeting glimpses of the timeless within time, of the silence behind the silence.

Somnium by Brú Theatre, directed by James Riordan with the company, composer Julianna Bloodgood, runs at Bank of Ireland Theatre, University of Galway, as part of Galway International Arts Festival 2024 till July 20.

Jul 19, 2024